U.S. immigration
officers have arrested more than 680 people in recent operations, 75
percent of whom have criminal records, the homeland security chief said
on Monday of actions that have alarmed immigrant rights groups.

U.S.
Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said the operations were routine
and consistent with regular operations carried out by U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

Immigration
rights advocates say agents are deporting migrants indiscriminately and
that the operations, which they describe as raids, do not take into
account an immigrant's threat level or family ties to the United States.

Kelly
said in a statement that crimes committed by the illegal immigrants
ranged from homicide to driving under the influence of alcohol.

Some
of the immigrants arrested had ignored final orders of deportation,
according to ICE, the agency responsible for immigrant arrests and
deportations. The agency did not specify its reasoning for a handful of
immigrants other than that they were in the country illegally.

Former
Democratic President Barack Obama was criticized for being the
"deporter in chief" after he deported over 400,000 people in 2012, more
than any president in a single year.

In
2014, Obama's homeland security chief issued a memo directing agents to
focus on deporting a narrow slice of immigrants, namely those who had
recently entered the country or committed serious felonies. Immigrants
who were arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol, for
example, were treated as lower priorities for deportation.

President Donald Trump promised to deport 2 million to 3 million migrants with criminal records on taking office.

At
a news conference with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on
Monday, Trump said his administration had "really done a great job" in
its recent arrests of immigrants.

"We're
actually taking people that are criminals, very, very, hardened
criminals in some cases with a tremendous track record of abuse and
problems," Trump said.

ICE
said in a statement on Monday that the operations targeted immigrants
in the Midwest, Los Angeles, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia and San Antonio.

Not
every immigrant arrested had a criminal record or prior order to leave
the country, according to the data released by U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement.

In Los Angeles, for example, 151 out of the 161 immigrants arrested had
criminal records, but the agency did not give a reason for the arrests
of the 10 migrants with no criminal record.

The
immigrants' arrests followed Trump's Jan. 27 executive order
temporarily banning people from seven predominantly Muslim countries and
all refugees from entering the United States. That order was suspended
by a U.S. district judge, in a ruling upheld by a federal appeals court.

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